Pastors Use Sermons and Personal Touch to Address Matters of Race

Most Protestant senior pastors say their church is open to hearing about racial reconciliation.

But few say church leaders are clamoring to hear more about it.

And pastors seem to prefer personal relationships and prayer when it comes to addressing matters of race.

Those are among the findings of a new study about pastors, churches and racial reconciliation from Nashville-based LifeWay Research. The survey of 1,000 Protestant senior pastors, found little pushback against or demand for sermons on racial reconciliation in their churches, said Scott McConnell, executive director of LifeWay Research.

“Most pastors appear to be taking a leadership role in encouraging racial reconciliation,” said McConnell. “Nine in 10 pastors say they recently have done something to encourage racial reconciliation. A majority has been socializing with other races and ethnicities and have led prayer on racial reconciliation, but less than a third have addressed economic inequity or publicly lamented injustice.”

Mixed feelings about racial reconciliation

Researchers found most pastors (90 percent) say their church would welcome a sermon on racial reconciliation. Seven percent disagree, while three percent aren’t sure.

While 45 percent have preached on racial reconciliation in the last three months, few pastors have been criticized for speaking about race. Five percent say they’d received negative feedback for addressing racial reconciliation from the pulpit in the last two years. Eighty-four percent received no negative feedback. Ten percent haven’t spoken about the topic.

Yet few churches seem enthusiastic about discussing issues of race, according to their pastors. About three-quarters of pastors (73 percent) say they have not been urged by church leaders to preach about reconciliation. About a quarter (26 percent) have been urged to preach on the issue.

Responses varied by denomination. And at times, a pastor’s impressions of their church and their church’s actions were at odds.

Baptist (92 percent) and Pentecostal (93 percent) pastors, for example, are more likely to say their church would welcome a sermon on reconciliation. However, they’re less likely to have been asked by church leaders to preach on the topic. Only about 1 in 5 Baptist (17 percent) or Pentecostal pastors (20 percent) have been urged to address reconciliation.

By contrast, Presbyterian/Reformed pastors are likely to say their churches are open to sermons on reconciliation (92 percent) and more likely than other denominational pastors to have been urged to preach on the topic (37 percent).

Overall, mainline pastors are more likely to have been urged to preach on racial reconciliation than evangelical pastors (38 vs. 22 percent).

Age also played a role in whether or not pastors had preached on racial reconciliation. Pastors age 65 or more are least likely to have preached on racial reconciliation in the last quarter (32 percent) and least likely to have been urged to preach on it (18 percent).

Reconciliation has a personal touch

The new LifeWay Research study found that pastors report taking a number of personal steps when it comes to racial reconciliation.

Meals with people from other ethnicities are most common.

Almost three-quarters (72 percent) of Protestant pastors say they’ve had a meal with a diverse small group of people (less than 10) in the last month. That includes 44 percent who say they’ve had a meal in the last week with a small group that included someone of another race.

About 4 in 10 white pastors (42 percent) say they’ve had a meal in the past week with a diverse group. So do 52 percent of African-American pastors and 60 percent of pastors of other ethnicities. The portion of pastors who say they’ve had a meal with a diverse group in the past week varies by denomination. Baptist (46 percent), Methodist (48 percent) and Pentecostal (50 percent) pastors were more likely, while Presbyterian/Reformed pastors (34 percent) were less likely.

Among other findings about pastors’ actions in the last three months:

57 percent of Protestant senior pastors spent time socializing with neighbors of other ethnicities.

53 percent led times of corporate prayer for racial reconciliation.

51 percent discussed reconciliation with church leaders.

45 percent preached on racial reconciliation.

40 percent met regularly with pastors of other ethnicities.

31 percent invested church funds in changing local economic inequalities.

20 percent led a public lament over racial unrest or injustice.

Diversity remains a challenge for churches

Previous LifeWay Research studies have found questions of racial reconciliation and diversity take a back burner at many Protestant churches.

A 2015 report among churchgoers found more than half (53 percent) disagreed with the statement, “My church needs to become more ethnically diverse. Forty percent agreed. Seven percent disagreed.

Two-thirds (67 percent) said their church had done enough to become diverse. That study also found churchgoers who oppose more diversity do so with gusto. A third (33 percent) strongly disagree that their church needs to be more diverse. More than 4 in 10 (42 percent) felt strongly their church was doing enough.

Evangelicals (71 percent) are most likely to say their church is diverse enough, compared to non-evangelicals. And white churchgoers (37 percent) are least likely to say their church should become more diverse, compared to other ethnicities.

A 2014 study found most Protestant pastors believe every church should strive for racial diversity (85 percent) and that “churches should reflect the racial diversity in their community” (91 percent).

Yet most (86 percent) also said their congregation is predominantly one racial or ethnic group.

“It seems like most congregations are eager for somebody else to do the work of reconciliation,” McConnell said, “rather than embrace it for themselves.”

Race is an issue with the church and community. we must address the issues openly and according to scripture. we asked a former pastor to help us. he is the one that recognized the issue years ago when he was our pastor and made changes to include other races. Dr Phil Levin, opened our hearts and doors to everyone in the community. Now with great tension in our area we asked him to come back for a special week of re-training. As your article points out, we have much to do in our churches to mend a racial divide. Dr Phil Levin had a way about him tat encourages everyone, He was not the most dynamic preacher we ever had but he was the most loving nd had the pastor heart for everyone. HIs words again brought us closer and we are more united.

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